Friday, November 14, 2025

Back In Action: Jesse Harvey: South Australia: Shaken Baby Syndrome Series: (Part 2) The Age (Reporters Michael and Ruby Schwartz) explains why experts say lhis case has question marks alll over it - even after he spent six years in jail, noting that: "A young man who spent almost six years in jail for shaking his baby son has since learnt the boy had a congenital heart condition that causes seizures, casting doubt on whether the 2019 conviction was sound. Jesse Harvey was jailed for recklessly causing serious injury to his seven-week-old son Casey by shaking him – the result of a diagnosis of abuse at the Royal Children’s Hospital. Harvey has recently been released after serving his full sentence, but insists he is innocent. While he was in prison, Harvey’s mother died and Casey died in 2022."



ACCESS TO PODCAST:


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QUOTE  OF THE DAY: "The final episode of Diagnosing Murder interviews Harvey for the first time. He said he was speaking out because: “I spent the last six years in jail for something I didn’t do. I lost my son. And these people need to be held accountable because it’s going to continue to happen.”


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SECOND QUOTE OF THE DAY: "Harvey also pointed to Casey’s illness before the seizure, saying he took his son to Ballarat Base hospital a week earlier and he was there for three days. Before Casey was discharged, Harvey says: “I argued with the hospital left, right and centre [that they should keep him in] because he wasn’t right. And they pretty much told me, they’re the doctors. ‘He’s starting to feed well now, take him home. If he gets worse in the next 72 hours, bring him back’.”

Forty-eight hours later, Harvey says he found Casey pale, staring, unresponsive, and having abnormal movements. Harvey said he recognised these as likely seizures and took him back to the hospital."

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PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "Diagnosing Murder is investigating shaken baby syndrome. A list obtained by the podcast shows the diagnosis has played a role in jailing well over 100 people in this country since 1995. The podcast raises questions about whether the diagnosis is based on reliable scientific evidence."

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STORY: "This man spent six years in jail, but experts say his case has question marks all over it," by Reporters Michael Bachelard and Ruby Schwartz, published by 'The Age' on November 2, 2025. (Michael Bachelard is a senior writer and former deputy editor and investigations editor of The Age. He has worked in Canberra, Melbourne and Jakarta, has written two books and won multiple awards for journalism, including the Gold Walkley...Ruby Schwartz is the Head of Investigative Podcasts for The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald."


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GIST: "A young man who spent almost six years in jail for shaking his baby son has since learnt the boy had a congenital heart condition that causes seizures, casting doubt on whether the 2019 conviction was sound.

Jesse Harvey was jailed for recklessly causing serious injury to his seven-week-old son Casey by shaking him – the result of a diagnosis of abuse at the Royal Children’s Hospital.

Harvey has recently been released after serving his full sentence, but insists he is innocent. While he was in prison, Harvey’s mother died and Casey died in 2022.

Casey’s death certificate, obtained by this masthead’s investigative podcast, Diagnosing Murder, reveals a South Australian coroner concluded the boy’s cause of death was “aspiration and tracheitis [choking] on a background of acquired brain injury with epilepsy and arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy” – a serious congenital heart condition.

The final episode of Diagnosing Murder interviews Harvey for the first time. He said he was speaking out because: “I spent the last six years in jail for something I didn’t do. I lost my son. And these people need to be held accountable because it’s going to continue to happen.”

Diagnosing Murder is investigating shaken baby syndrome. A list obtained by the podcast shows the diagnosis has played a role in jailing well over 100 people in this country since 1995. The podcast raises questions about whether the diagnosis is based on reliable scientific evidence.

In Harvey’s trial in 2019, child abuse specialists from the Victorian Forensic Paediatric Medical Service (VFPMS) acknowledged Casey had a heart condition, including a heart murmur, based on the findings of a Royal Children’s Hospital cardiologist.

They said the enlargement of the seven-week-old’s heart was “moderate” and that it was unlikely to have anything to do with what had caused his brain injury.

Instead, medical evidence the VFPMS presented at Casey’s trial alleged he had been shaken so violently he had been subject to “quite significant forces” equivalent to “high velocity motor vehicle accidents, significant crush injuries to the head or falls … from a height of greater than about 10 metres”.

Because of the injuries and the alleged force involved, a forensic doctor dismissed other accidental or medical explanations.

‘I was given a plea deal to say, if I plead guilty, I can stay out and look after my mum [who was ill]. I told him where to put that.’

Jesse Harvey speaking on Diagnosing Murder

But in a report produced at the request of the Diagnosing Murder podcast, forensic pathologist Stephen Cordner observed five problems with the prosecution’s medical evidence against Harvey that “seem not to have been explored, or were insufficiently explored” at his trial.

In response to questions about the case, the Royal Children’s Hospital said it would be inappropriate to comment.

At the trial, it was revealed that baby Casey spent three days in hospital in the lead up to the seizure that his father saw. He was treated for an infection, fever, irritability, poor feeding and vomiting. A lumbar puncture showed blood in his cerebrospinal fluid.

However, asked at the trial about this, the expert doctor said Casey’s illness did not show a medical cause for his seizure. It was “a separate thing from what occurred [the alleged shaking],” they said.

Diagnosing murder: Is a medical theory ruining lives?

The evidence for shaking, according to the court transcript obtained by this masthead, was a group of clinical findings which for decades has been associated with the diagnosis known as shaken baby syndrome. Among them were subdural haemorrhage – bleeding under the dural membrane that covers the brain – bleeding on the retina, the light sensitive layer at the back of the eye, and brain swelling.

The link between these signs and shaking has come under international scientific and legal scrutiny in recent years.

Harvey was alone with the child at the time of his seizure. He pleaded not guilty at his trial but he told this masthead his own defence team did not believe him. They did not call an expert to contradict the testimony of the VFPMS doctor and did not question the diagnosis, only suggesting that perhaps Jesse Harvey’s brother had shaken the baby instead.

His lawyer suggested to Harvey that he plead guilty.

“I was given a plea deal to say, if I plead guilty, I can stay out and look after my mum [who was ill],” Harvey told Diagnosing Murder. “I told him where to put that. I said, ‘I’m not admitting to something I didn’t do to get less time’.

“If I was rich, I probably would have been able to afford good lawyers, and might have turned out different.”

Cordner’s report questioned five aspects of the prosecution case against Harvey.

Among them was “the existence of underlying heart disease”, which was different to the heart disease he was diagnosed with at the Royal Children’s Hospital, and which was “mentioned subsequently as part of the cause of Casey’s death on his death certificate”.

A medical report written by the VFPMS doctor and used in Harvey’s prosecution noted a “moderate” enlargement of Casey’s heart and said: “This is likely to be an incidental finding and while clinically significant, is unlikely to be associated with Casey’s presentation.”

‘In my opinion, if Australia had a Criminal Cases Review Commission, this is a case it should and would review.’

Former forensic pathologist Professor Stephen Cordner

Heart arrhythmias are one of the well-known causes of seizures because they can reduce oxygen to the brain, leading to brain damage. Casey’s arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy was in addition to his other, already complicated, illness.

One MRI report referred to bilateral chronic subdural haemorrhage – evidence of bleeding over the brain some time in the past – as well as recent bleeding. The recent bleeding was one of the clinical signs that VFPMS doctors said pointed to abuse.

But Cordner said older bleeding complicates the assessment of what caused the recent bleeding – it could even itself be a cause, or a vulnerability, leading to later bleeding.

Cordner also questioned evidence from the VFPMS that changes in Casey’s neck shown in an MRI scan indicated that his spinal ligaments had been damaged. This evidence formed a major part of the prosecution’s conclusion that there had been “forceful shaking” despite the absence of any external signs of injury on Casey.

Cordner said the evidence given that the damage was “possibly due to partial tear or oedema” was “some distance from being diagnostically sure there is traumatic neck injury”.

“In my opinion, if Australia had a Criminal Cases Review Commission, this is a case it should and would review,” Cordner wrote in his opinion.

Information obtained by this masthead also reveals the child’s mother, whom we have chosen not to name for privacy reasons, suffered from a seizure disorder when she was a child, and into adulthood.

When she was two months old, Casey’s mother suffered similar symptoms to those that affected her son 22 years later. She too was judged to be a shaken baby. She was removed from her family and put into foster care. She was later returned to her father and grew up with him, telling Harvey her father had not been abusive.

Her medical notes as a baby, like those of her son Casey, list projectile vomiting, irritability and blood-stained fluid in her head. As an adult, she took anti-seizure medication and suffered from epilepsy. All this, said Cordner, lent weight to a possible genetic factor in Casey’s illness.

Harvey raised his partner’s history of seizures with the VFPMS doctors diagnosing Casey. But, like Casey’s, his mother’s seizures as a baby were attributed to physical abuse. Full medical histories of the parents were not taken. The doctors excluded medical conditions after conducting an “extensive panel” of other tests.

Harvey also pointed to Casey’s illness before the seizure, saying he took his son to Ballarat Base hospital a week earlier and he was there for three days.

Before Casey was discharged, Harvey says: “I argued with the hospital left, right and centre [that they should keep him in] because he wasn’t right. And they pretty much told me, they’re the doctors. ‘He’s starting to feed well now, take him home. If he gets worse in the next 72 hours, bring him back’.”

Forty-eight hours later, Harvey says he found Casey pale, staring, unresponsive, and having abnormal movements. Harvey said he recognised these as likely seizures and took him back to the hospital.

Casey was later transferred to the Royal Children’s Hospital, where, at the hands of the VFPMS doctors, suspicion fell on Harvey for deliberate child abuse.

Cordner has called for a broad inquiry into the science of shaken baby syndrome, saying that, while child abuse occurs, there is a real question about how well doctors can diagnose it in particular cases. In cases such as Harvey’s, and many others, the prosecution evidence is that the child had been violently shaken, but there are no external signs of injury such as bruising or abrasions.

Some convictions in Australia in shaken baby syndrome cases – which are also known as abusive, or inflicted head trauma – were likely to have been wrong, Cordner said.

He told the podcast there are likely 50 known medical conditions, and potentially more that are still unknown, that can cause one or more of the triad findings without abuse having occurred.

Diagnosing what goes on inside a brain is inherently difficult, and this masthead acknowledges that the VFPMS makes its decisions in good faith and with the best of intentions.

The Royal Children’s Hospital said in a statement that the VFPMS was “underpinned by national and international research, which is constantly reviewed”.

“VFPMS paediatric clinicians provide forensic expertise in evaluating complex situations and multiple injuries … In their evaluation, VFPMS clinicians consider many aspects related to a child’s injuries, including a wide variety of symptoms and signs, which may be caused by other conditions. Due consideration is given to the presence of these conditions.”

The entire story can be read at:

 https://www.theage.com.au/national/this-man-spent-six-years-in-jail-but-experts-say-his-case-has-question-marks-all-over-it-20251029-p5n6c9.html

PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system. The Star has a "topic"  section which focuses on recent stories related to Dr. Charles Smith. It can be found at: http://www.thestar.com/topic/charlessmith. Information on "The Charles Smith Blog Award"- and its nomination process - can be found at: http://smithforensic.blogspot.com/2011/05/charles-smith-blog-award-nominations.html Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

SEE BREAKDOWN OF  SOME OF THE ON-GOING INTERNATIONAL CASES (OUTSIDE OF THE CONTINENTAL USA) THAT I AM FOLLOWING ON THIS BLOG,  AT THE LINK BELOW:  HL:


https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/120008354894645705/4704913685758792985


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FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."

Lawyer Radha Natarajan:

Executive Director: New England Innocence Project;


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FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true!


Christina Swarns: Executive Director: The Innocence Project;


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